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Supreme Court just gave DOGE access to Social Security data. Here's what personal information is at stake.

Supreme Court just gave DOGE access to Social Security data. Here's what personal information is at stake.

NBC News3 hours ago

The Supreme Court on Friday granted the Department of Government Efficiency access to Social Security Administration data that includes sensitive personal information of millions of Americans.
The decision comes as the federal government sought a stay, or temporary suspension, after a federal judge blocked DOGE's access to that data in April. The nation's highest court granted an emergency application from the Trump administration to lift that injunction; the case is expected to proceed in lower courts.
In its decision, the Supreme Court concluded the Social Security Administration may give DOGE access to agency records while the case plays out 'in order for those members to do their work.'
Both the White House and the Social Security Administration called the Supreme Court decision a victory. In a statement, White House spokesperson Elizabeth Huston said it will allow the Trump administration to 'carry out commonsense efforts to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse and modernize government information systems.'
Likewise, Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignano in a statement said the agency 'will continue driving forward modernization efforts, streamlining government systems, and ensuring improved service and outcomes for our beneficiaries.'
Yet others expressed grave concern in reaction to the decision, including Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, advocacy groups and plaintiffs in the case against DOGE and the Social Security Administration.
'This is a sad day for our democracy and a scary day for millions of people,' said the coalition of plaintiffs including American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees; the American Federation of Teachers; and the Alliance for Retired Americans, who are represented by Democracy Forward.
'This ruling will enable President Trump and DOGE's affiliates to steal Americans' private and personal data,' they said, while vowing to 'use every legal tool at our disposal' to prevent the misuse of public data as the case moves forward.
Millions of Americans' sensitive data at stake
The dispute focuses on how much access DOGE should have to Americans' personal data.
The plaintiffs filed an initial complaint in early March, stating the Social Security Administration had 'abandoned its commitment to maintaining the privacy' of the sensitive personal information of millions of Americans under DOGE's influence.
The Social Security Administration collects and stores some of the 'most sensitive' personally identifiable information of millions of Americans, ranging from seniors to adults to children, the complaint notes.
When applying for a Social Security number, the agency requires the disclosure of place and date of birth, citizenship, ethnicity, race, sex, phone number and mailing address. It also requires parents' names and Social Security numbers.
But the agency is also privy to other personal data, including personal health information, the complaint notes. That includes:
driver's license and identification information
bank and credit cards
birth and marriage certificates
pension information
home and work addresses
school records
immigration and naturalization records
family court records
employment and employer records
psychological and psychiatric health records
hospitalization records
addiction treatment records
records for HIV/AIDS tests
The Social Security Administration also collects tax information, including total earnings, Social Security and Medicare wages and annual employee withholdings.
DOGE has not only accessed the agency's sensitive and protected information; it has also publicly shared it, according to the complaint. The actions of the defendants, including the Social Security Administration, DOGE and leaders including former head Elon Musk, have deprived Americans of privacy protections guaranteed by federal law and made their personal information vulnerable, the complaint alleges.
In her dissent, Jackson, joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, notes that records show 'DOGE received far broader data access' than the Social Security Administration usually allows in fraud, waste and abuse investigations. Typically, those investigations start with high level, anonymized data, with more access to more detailed information only granted as necessary.
Justice Elena Kagan also dissented in the 6-3 decision.
'The government wants to give DOGE unfettered access to this personal, non-anonymized information right now – before the courts have time to assess whether DOGE's access is lawful,' Justice Jackson wrote.
While litigation is pending, the government has asked to temporarily suspend the lower court's temporary limitations on DOGE's access to Social Security data, she noted.
'But the government fails to substantiate its stay request by showing that it or the public will suffer irreparable harm absent the court's intervention,' Justice Jackson wrote.

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Judge blocks administration from enforcing anti-diversity and anti-transgender executive orders
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  • NBC News

Judge blocks administration from enforcing anti-diversity and anti-transgender executive orders

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal judge in California has blocked the Trump administration from enforcing anti-diversity and anti-transgender executive orders in grant funding requirements that LGBTQ+ organizations say are unconstitutional. U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar said Monday that the federal government cannot force recipients to halt programs that promote diversity, equity and inclusion or acknowledge the existence of transgender people in order to receive grant funding. The order will remain in effect while the legal case continues, although government lawyers will likely appeal. The funding provisions "reflect an effort to censor constitutionally protected speech and services promoting DEI and recognizing the existence of transgender individuals," Tigar wrote. He went on to say that the executive branch must still be bound by the Constitution in shaping its agenda and that even in the context of federal subsidies, "it cannot weaponize Congressionally appropriated funds to single out protected communities for disfavored treatment or suppress ideas that it does not like or has deemed dangerous." The plaintiffs include health centers, LGBTQ+ services groups and the Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Historical Society. All receive federal funding and say they cannot complete their missions by following the president's executive orders. The San Francisco AIDS Foundation, one of the plaintiffs, said in 2023 it received a five-year grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to expand and enhance sexual health services, including the prevention of sexually transmitted infections. The $1.3 million project specifically targets communities disproportionately affected by sexual health disparities. But in April, the CDC informed the nonprofit that it must "immediately terminate all programs, personnel, activities, or contracts" that promote DEI or gender ideology. President Donald Trump has signed a flurry of executive orders since taking office in January, including ones to roll back transgender protections and stop DEI programs. Lawyers for the government say that the president is permitted to "align government funding and enforcement strategies" with his policies. Plaintiffs say that Congress — and not the president — has the power to condition how federal funds are used, and that the executive orders restrict free speech rights.

LA protests live: Trump denies he wants civil war as Marines deployed
LA protests live: Trump denies he wants civil war as Marines deployed

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timean hour ago

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LA protests live: Trump denies he wants civil war as Marines deployed

VIDEO Gavin Newsom, the California governor, has said the state will sue the president for deploying about 300 guardsmen over protests against ICE immigration raids | Samuel Lovett , Los Angeles | Lara Spirit , Washington Correspondent | Hugh Tomlinson , Washington Reporter Monday June 09 2025, 10.03pm, The Times What you need to know LA residents protest against immigration raids that have led to hundreds of foreign nationals being rounded up and arrested About 1,000 National Guard troops are on the ground in Los Angeles, a US official said, as close to 500 Marines are being sent to the city, according to reports Trump said he did not want a civil war after Gavin Newsom, the California governor, announced the state would sue the president over the deployment of the National Guard At least ten protesters have been arrested in downtown Los Angeles while police fired non-lethal bullets at a reporter and a photographer Map of protests in downtown LA 13 minutes ago 10.03pm Protesters arrested at Trump Tower A few dozen demonstrators who were protesting federal immigration enforcement were arrested inside Trump Tower in Manhattan on Monday. The activists chanted 'bring them back' and carried signs that read, 'Who will be disappeared next?' and, 'Due process is a right for everyone.' A large group of New York police officers arrived and warned the group they would be arrested if they failed to disperse. The protesters continued to chant slogans, and were placed in zip ties and removed from the building. About 24 were reported to have been arrested. Demonstrations that began in Los Angeles on Friday to protest ICE raids have spread to more than a dozen cities. Karen Bass, the Los Angeles mayor, has called on anti-ICE demonstrators to protest peacefully to avoid falling into 'the Trump administration's trap'. 'LA has a proud history of peaceful protest for immigrants rights,' Bass wrote on X. 'We must continue that legacy — don't fall into the Trump administration's trap. Protest peacefully. Looting and vandalism will not be tolerated.' Law enforcement arrested 41 protesters on Sunday for offences including attempted murder with a petrol bomb, looting, arson and failure to disperse. About 500 Marines are being sent to Los Angeles to support National Guard troops in protecting federal buildings and personnel, according to reports. The decision to send in a full battalion of Marines marks a significant escalation in the use of the military to respond to protests and comes after objections from Gavin Newsom, the California governor. Pete Hegseth, the defence secretary, said on Saturday that he had ordered the Marines to prepare for deployment 'if violence continues'. The Marines, who are based at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, California, are prohibited from arresting protesters unless Trump invokes the Insurrection Act. Waymo has suspended its service in parts of San Francisco due to expanding anti-ICE protests in the city. The Alphabet-owned 'robotaxi' company earlier halted services in downtown Los Angeles after protesters torched at least five of its self-driving cars on Sunday. 'We're aware of potential protests and will not be providing service in the areas protesters may be gathering out of abundance of caution,' a Waymo spokeswoman said. Hundreds of protesters have gathered outside of a federal immigration building in the city calling for the release of David Huerta, a union leader who was arrested for allegedly impeding an immigration raid in Los Angeles on Friday. President Trump denied a claim by Gavin Newsom, the California governor, that he wanted a 'civil war on the streets of America'. 'No, it's just the opposite,' Trump said. 'I don't want a civil war. A civil war would happen if you left it to people like him.' In an interview, Newsom accused Trump of 'purposely sowing division' by deploying the National Guard to quell unrest in Los Angeles. Trump is holding an Invest America Roundtable event in Washington to talk about investment accounts for newborn children, but he started by talking about the protests in Los Angeles. After calling for Newsom to be arrested, Trump was asked what crime he felt the governor had committed. 'I think his primary crime is running for governor, because he's done such a bad job,' Trump said. 'He's destroying one of our great states.' Trump said he doubted that the threat of arrest would be politically beneficial for Newsom. 1 hour ago 8.43pm Where are America's sanctuary cities? Los Angeles, and by extension California, has become a flashpoint in the Trump administration's crackdown on immigration because of its status as a migrant 'sanctuary', where officials limit their co-operation with federal agents seeking to detain and deport undocumented arrivals. It is not the only such place in America, however. There are 12 sanctuary states including California, while various counties and cities in the other 38, including where Republicans dominate regional politics, have declared the status. This ranges from the city of New Orleans in Louisiana to Atlanta, Georgia. DANIEL COLE/REUTERS President Trump said that National Guard troops will respond with force if they are impeded during the Los Angeles protests. 'The Insurrectionists have a tendency to spit in the face of the National Guardsmen/women, and others,' Trump wrote on Truth Social. 'These Patriots are told to accept this, it's just the way life runs. But not in the Trump Administration. IF THEY SPIT, WE WILL HIT, and I promise you they will be hit harder than they have ever been hit before. Such disrespect will not be tolerated!' 8.12pm ICE targets Home Depot in immigration crackdown Samuel Lovett in Los Angeles The government's immigration enforcement agency remains active in Los Angeles, despite the ongoing protests and unrest. A Home Depot in Huntington Park was visited by agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) early on Monday morning, locals said. In a sign of the White House's commitment to its immigration crackdown, one man was chased across the property car park, according to a worker. 'It's disheartening that the raids are continuing,' she said, without giving her name. 'The people here are just to trying to make a living; they're contributing to the economy and not causing problems for anyone.' It is local knowledge in LA that Home Depots employ undocumented foreign workers, making the business an easy target for ICE agents. Asked whether the Trump administration could legally arrest Gavin Newsom, Rob Bonta, the California attorney-general, dismissed the threat. 'It's just more talk, more bluff, more bluster, more threats,' Bonta told reporters on Monday as he announced the state's lawsuit against the Trump administration. 'It is the president and the Trump administration that is consistently and frequently blatantly and brazenly violating the law, not Governor Newsom.' Trump earlier said that Newsom should be arrested after the governor dared Tom Homan, Trump's 'border tsar', to try to do so. Protests over Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in Los Angeles and the arrest of a California union leader are taking place in more than a dozen US cities. Rallies are being held in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Denver, New York City, Oregon, Seattle, and Washington DC, along with several cities in California and Pennsylvania. The demonstrators are calling for the immediate release of David Huerta, the president of the California branch of the Service Employees International Union. Huerta has been held in custody since Friday when he was arrested for allegedly obstructing law enforcement officers from executing a federal search warrant at a workplace suspected of hiring undocumented migrants. The 58-year-old has been charged with conspiring to impede an officer during a raid, and is expected to make a first appearance in court on Monday afternoon in Los Angeles. Rob Bonta, the California attorney-general, said protests in Los Angeles had 'mostly dissipated' when the first National Guard troops arrived on Sunday. 'Since Trump announced his plan to deploy troops, the situation on the ground has escalated quickly with unrest growing overnight, causing highways to close and putting people in danger,' Bonta said during a news conference. 'We'll never know what might have been had the president left our state and local authorities to continue the important work they were already doing and were more than capable of doing,' he added. Rob Bonta, the California attorney-general, accused Trump of unnecessarily inflaming the Los Angeles protests by ordering in the National Guard. 'Trump and [the defence secretary, Pete] Hegseth jumped from zero to 60 bypassing law enforcement expertise and evaluation, threw caution to the wind and sidelined strategy in an unnecessary and inflammatory escalation that only further spurred unrest,' Bonta said. Trump invoked a section of the US code that allows the president to overrule a state governor's authority when he considers it necessary to repel an invasion or suppress a rebellion. 'There was no risk of rebellion, no threat of foreign invasion,' Bonta said. California will file a lawsuit asking the courts to set aside Trump's order this afternoon, he added. Approximately 1,000 National Guard troops are on the ground in Los Angeles, a US official said. More troops are expected to arrive throughout the rest of Monday and officials believe that the 2,000 that the president ordered into the city will be there by the end of the day. The troops are part of the new Task Force 51, under the control of Major General Scott Sherman, the deputy commander of US Army North. Gavin Newsom responded to Trump's comments at the White House suggesting that the California governor should be arrested by accusing the president of marching America 'toward authoritarianism'. 'The president of the United States just called for the arrest of a sitting governor,' Newsom wrote on X after Trump said that Tom Homan, the 'border tsar', should arrest him. Newsom dared Homan to arrest him earlier today. 'This is a day I hoped I would never see in America,' Newsom went on. 'I don't care if you're a Democrat or a Republican this is a line we cannot cross as a nation — this is an unmistakable step toward authoritarianism.' Newsom added that Trump had created a 'manufactured crisis' to 'take over a state militia and violate the US constitution'. 'The illegal order he signed could allow him to send the military into ANY STATE HE WISHES,' he said. Samuel Lovett in Los Angeles Protesters are using TikTok to communicate with one another and share 'intelligence' on police tactics, according to a Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) source. The source, who has been monitoring demonstrators' social media accounts, said some of the protesters were using the video platform to simply document events but that many were 'providing intelligence on police tactics' and their location as they responded to the unrest. 'I saw that myself when I was monitoring TikTok last night,' he said, adding that there weren't any specific accounts or individuals acting as ringleaders for the protests. 'It's just random people that jump on TikTok and then go live.' The source also said that the LAPD were preparing for a fourth night of unrest in the city, adding: 'We don't know where specifically or when, but we are setting up for it.' President Trump has blamed 'insurrectionists' for the turmoil in Los Angeles. 'The people that are causing the problem are professional agitators, they're insurrectionists, they're bad people,' Trump told reporters. He did not respond to a question on whether he would invoke the Insurrection Act, the 1807 law that gives the president the authority to deploy the US military on home soil to suppress civil disorder. Trump took another swipe at Gavin Newsom, remarking that the California governor was doing a 'terrible job'. 'I like Gavin Newsom, he's a nice guy but he's grossly incompetent. Everybody knows it,' the president said. Asked about Newsom's challenge to Tom Homan to arrest him earlier on Monday, Trump suggested that the 'border tsar' should detain the governor. 'I would do it, if I were Tom,' Trump added. 'Gavin likes the publicity, but I think it would be a great thing.' President Trump has insisted he made a 'great decision' in deploying the National Guard to tackle the Los Angeles protests, claiming the city faced total destruction if he had not intervened. 'If we had not done so, Los Angeles would have been completely obliterated,' Trump posted on Truth Social in his first public comments on the crisis on Monday. The president again attacked Gavin Newsom, the California governor, and Karen Bass, the Los Angeles mayor, who have accused the White House of inflaming the situation and seizing on the pretext to send in troops. Trump added: '[They] should be saying, 'THANK YOU, PRESIDENT TRUMP, YOU ARE SO WONDERFUL. WE WOULD BE NOTHING WITHOUT YOU, SIR.' 'Instead, they choose to lie to the People of California and America by saying that we weren't needed, and that these are 'peaceful protests.'' 4 hours ago 5.17pm What are the LA protests about? Protests descended into violence in Los Angeles over the weekend as police faced off with demonstrators decrying workplace raids by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). California state and local officials, who are mainly Democrats, accused President Trump of inflaming initially small-scale demonstrations by mounting a federal response, including the deployment of the National Guard. Gavin Newsom, the governor of California, requested Trump remove the Guard members, calling their deployment a 'serious breach of state sovereignty'. 5 hours ago 5.05pm Mexican president condemns violence The Mexican president has condemned the immigration protests in Los Angeles but stopped short of calling for an end to demonstrations. Speaking at her morning press conference, Claudia Sheinbaum said: 'It must be clear: we condemn violence wherever it comes from.' She added that the Mexican community should 'act peacefully and not fall for provocations'. Speaking alongside Sheinbaum, Juan Ramón de la Fuente, the Mexican foreign secretary, said at least 42 Mexicans were being held in detention centres after the recent immigration raids in Los Angeles and four had been deported. Waymo has suspended services in downtown Los Angeles after several of its self-driving 'robotaxis' were torched by protesters at the weekend. At least five Waymo vehicles have been pictured in flames and covered in graffiti since the clashes erupted in protest at federal immigration raids. The taxi company, that is owned by Google's parent company Alphabet, has said it will continue to operate in other parts of Los Angeles. Waymo's driverless taxis have faced a guerrilla campaign by angry LA residents after charging stations for the vehicles appeared in residential areas earlier this year. Frustrated by the incessant beeping the vehicles make as they reverse at all times of day and night, some vigilante homeowners have fought back, launching a campaign of peaceful sabotage against the charging stations. • 5 hours ago 4.44pm Mayor dismisses Maga talk of arrest The mayor of Los Angeles has said she is not concerned about being arrested after the suggestion was made by President Trump's 'border tsar'. Karen Bass told CNN that she 'can't imagine a situation where I am going to interfere with federal agents'. She added that it was 'inappropriate' for Tom Homan to make the suggestion at the weekend that she and Gavin Newsom, the California governor, could be arrested if they impeded efforts to quell the protests. Bass said Trump's decision to send in the National Guard was 'an escalation that didn't have to happen' and played down the extent of the protests, insisting that they were confined to a few streets in downtown Los Angeles. A top LA official has urged protesters to do their part to keep the peace before a fourth day of probable unrest. 'Don't feed into this narrative that we don't care, that we're going to hurt each other and hurt our city. We don't want that to happen. Definitely we want to have calm,' Hilda Solis, the chair pro tempore of the Los Angeles County board of supervisors, told CNN on Monday morning. She said the emergency situation seen on Sunday night 'has been lifted' and Angelenos appeared to be returning to work as normal today. 6 hours ago 3.38pm Further protests planned in LA today Several protest events have been scheduled for Monday after the overnight unrest came to a standstill. At 9am local time (5pm BST), a news conference is set to be held by the advocacy group, Mujeres En Acción, in LA's fashion district, where Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers conducted raids on Friday. A student walkout against the raids and the National Guard deployment is expected to begin at 11am in schools across the county. At noon, the American Civil Liberties Union is slated to lead a 'peaceful protest' downtown. The Los Angeles Unified School District will meet at 3pm to discuss ICE activity on campuses after Superintendent Alberto M Carvalho condemned the raids for causing 'unnecessary fear, confusion and trauma for our students and families'. 7 hours ago 2.59pm Musk defends Trump Elon Musk has been supportive of President Trump's move to send in the National Guard to Los Angeles in a series of posts on X. The billionaire owner of X has shared posts from Trump and JD Vance, the vice-president, sharply defending the administration's decision on Sunday. In the latest signal of a tentative truce after last week's public fallout with Trump, Musk shared a screenshot of a post by the president on his Truth Social platform which called for Gavin Newsom, the California governor, and Karen Bass, the Los Angeles mayor, to 'apologise' for doing an 'absolutely horrible job'. The post also called the protesters, who are opposing Trump's immigration enforcement agenda, 'troublemakers and insurrectionists'. The head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has defended the agency, insisting that his officers were acting within the law. 'People need to stop calling ICE terrorists and criminal and racist, because they're enforcing the laws enacted by Congress, signed by a president,' Tom Homan told MSNBC. 'They're not making us up, they're trying to make [America] safer, one illegal criminal at a time.' He backed President Trump's decision to deploy the National Guard, brushing off the California governor Gavin Newsom's criticism and maintaining that the troops were deployed to 'protect life and property', adding: 'I was on the ground, Governor Newsom wasn't.' Homan defended ICE's tactics, claiming the agency would use 'every tool available'. 'It's not about raiding schools, raiding hospitals … There's no sanctuary for public safety threats or national security threats,' he said. Gavin Newsom has said that President Trump's decision to send in the National Guard to tackle protests 'will allow him to go into any state and do the same thing'. The California governor told the YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen that 'the people's lives are at risk' and reiterated his threat to challenge the deployment in court. He added: 'The reputation of this country is at stake. Great American cities and states … this is a preview of things to come, this isn't about LA per se.' X (Twitter) content blocked Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Enable cookiesAllow cookies once The White House has hit back at Gavin Newsom, claiming the California governor was 'too weak' to protect Los Angeles and 'did nothing' as the clashes erupted. 'Federal law enforcement officers were attacked by violent radicals and illegal criminals waving foreign flags because Governor Newsom was too weak to protect the city,' the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, tweeted in response to Newsom's post on X. Newsom's inaction forced President Trump to intervene and send in the National Guard, Leavitt said, adding: 'President Trump has stepped in to maintain law and order and protect federal buildings.' President Trump's head of border enforcement has said there have been no discussions about arresting Gavin Newsom, who challenged him to do so. Tom Homan was challenged by the California governor on Sunday to arrest him over his response to the protests in Los Angeles in an interview with MSNBC. Homan had earlier declined to rule out arresting Newson if he impeded federal efforts to address the protests. Homan told Fox News there 'was no discussion about arresting Newson' but added that 'no one's above the law'. The protests in Los Angeles, an overwhelmingly Democratic-voting city in a blue state, are perhaps the most volatile expression of opposition to Trump in his second term so far. But how popular is his administration in the country at large? According to an aggregation of polls by The Times data team, Trump's approval rating sits at 45 per cent, marginally higher compared with his first term but about 10 percentage points below that of Joe Biden in the equivalent period of his presidency. Some 52 per cent of Americans disapprove of Trump's performance in office. On the issue of immigration, which has driven the LA protests, a majority of Americans support his programme to deport immigrants illegally in the US, according to a YouGov poll for CBS taken before the protests. Some 54 per cent of respondents approved of the policy, against 46 per cent opposed. Demonstrators gathered in San Francisco, California, in solidarity with the anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles MINH CONNORS/ANADOLU/GETTY IMAGES Some of those who attended protests in Los Angeles on Sunday said they were doing so on behalf of family members who were immigrants and scared. Hannah Navarro, 29, a receptionist from the Boyle Heights neighbourhood, held a 'Melt ICE' sign and said some of her relatives were afraid to leave their homes due to immigration agency raids on workplaces. 'We're fighting so our families can come out of hiding,' she told the Wall Street Journal. Jocelyn Pimentel, 28, an Orange County resident, attended a demonstration with her 72-year-old grandmother, who was visiting from Puebla, Mexico. They were protesting on behalf of immediate family members who weren't in the US legally, she said, adding that immigrants needed better rights and pathways to citizenship. 9 hours ago 12.36pm California city ends 'divisive' ICE contract A demonstrator protests against federal immigration raids at the ICE building in San Francisco, California MANUEL ORBEGOZO/REUTERS A Californian city has ended what it calls a 'divisive' agreement with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency to house federal immigration detainees in its police department facility. Noting that law enforcement in Glendale had not engaged in federal immigration operations, officials said the city consistently ranked as one of the safest in the country and the police department was highly trusted by residents. 'At this time it is in our best interest to not allow that trust to be undermined,' officials said in a statement Sunday. Authorities for the city in Los Angeles County added that the move was to protect residents' safety and not politically motivated. 'Despite the transparency and safeguards the city has upheld, the city recognises that public perception of the ICE contract — no matter how limited or carefully managed, no matter the good — has become divisive,' according to the statement. 10 hours ago 11.55am Trump wants a spectacle, says governor Gavin Newsom and President Trump engage in regular arguments on social media MARK SCHIEFELBEIN/AP President Trump has rekindled his rivalry with Gavin Newsom, the governor of California, by deploying 2,000 soldiers to Los Angeles. Newsom has established California as a bastion of liberal resistance to Trump's presidency and set aside $50 million this year to 'Trump-proof' California, promising to mount legal challenges to White House overreach. Trump has responded furiously to Newsom's truculence, having previously scrapped with him over the Covid pandemic, the border with Mexico and wildfires in Los Angeles. • Read in full: 'Trump is deploying soldiers because he wants a spectacle' 11 hours ago 11.10am Chinese citizens warned to strengthen security Police previously attempted to disperse people in downtown LA by moving them north to Chinatown TAYFUN COSKUN/ANADOLU/GETTY IMAGES China's consulate in Los Angeles has advised its citizens in the area to strengthen personal security as unrest continues in America's second-biggest city. 'Chinese citizens in the region [should] strengthen personal security measures, stay away from gatherings, crowded areas or places with poor public security and avoid going out at night or travelling alone,' the consulate said in a statement. Chinese citizens should also 'closely monitor official announcements' and 'raise their safety awareness', it added. On Saturday Mexico's consulate in the city posted contact details for citizens requiring advice on the immigration raids. 11 hours ago 10.37am Marines 'on standby if violence continues' A protester faces off with a sheriff's deputy as the National Guard is deployed in Los Angeles RINGO CHIU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A contingent of US Marines is on standby to be deployed in Los Angeles if the protests continue to escalate. Pete Hegseth, the US defence secretary, said on Saturday evening that he might choose to send active-duty Marines from Camp Pendleton, south of LA, 'if violence continues'. The California governor, Gavin Newsom, who had already criticised President Trump's deployment of National Guard reservists to the city, dismissed Hegseth's suggestion. 'The secretary of defense is now threatening to deploy active-duty Marines on American soil against its own citizens. This is deranged behaviour,' Newsom posted on X. 11 hours ago 10.30am How the protests have unfolded Blocks around City Hall were closed off, with officers parking damaged cars in front of the building RINGO CHIU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Earlier protests in Los Angeles, a sprawling city of four million people, were centred on Sunday around several blocks downtown. It was the third and most intense day of largely peaceful demonstrations against Trump's immigration crackdown in the region, and some sporadic violence. But the arrival of about 300 National Guard troops prompted anger and fear among many residents. The guard was deployed specifically to protect federal buildings, including the downtown detention centre where protesters concentrated. The protests began on Friday after it emerged Immigration Customs Enforcement agents were carrying out raids in the Westlake district as well as in Paramount, south of LA, where the population is more than 82 per cent Hispanic. 12 hours ago 10.15am Elon Musk condemns protests X (Twitter) content blocked Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Enable cookiesAllow cookies once Elon Musk posted a photograph of a protester standing on a damaged car in Los Angeles, waving a Mexican flag. 'This is not ok,' the world's richest man wrote on X, the social media platform he owns. Musk was an adviser to Trump before the two began exchanging insults in public last week. Musk denounced the president's sweeping tax and spending bill as a 'disgusting abomination', prompting an exchange of social media acrimony between the pair. Trump said on Saturday that his relationship with the billionaire donor was over and warned there would be ' serious consequences ' if Musk decided to fund Democrats running against Republicans before votes on the tax and spending bill. 12 hours ago 10.05am Police gather at City Hall Protesters torched cars on Sunday REUTERS A heavy police presence remains in and around Los Angeles City Hall. Several blocks surrounding the building, which is lit up and flanked by trees, were closed off by lines of armed troops as they diverted away traffic. More than a dozen Los Angeles police department cars were parked in front of an adjacent building, some with their front windows smashed from earlier confrontations. Clusters of people in masks loitered nearby on street corners but none showed any desire to engage with officers. 12 hours ago 9.40am Australian journalist hit while reporting An Australian television reporter has been shot in the leg by a Los Angeles police officer while broadcasting the protests. Channel 9's US correspondent, Lauren Tomasi, grimaced after she was hit in the leg with a rubber bullet after filming a live cross on the riots in downtown LA. The video shows a police officer taking aim and shooting at the journalist, as police were trying to move protesters back. Tomasi could be heard saying 'I'm alright'. The incident has been condemned by the Australian Green senator Sarah Hanson-Young, who has urged the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, to raise the incident with President Trump. 'US authorities shooting an Australian journalist is simply shocking,' she said. 'It is completely unacceptable and must be called out.' 12 hours ago 9.28am California 'did not need' National Guard The National Guard were deployed in Los Angeles on Sunday ERIC THAYER/AP The Democratic governor of California previously mocked Trump for posting a congratulatory message to the National Guard on social media before troops had arrived in Los Angeles. Gavin Newsom had repeatedly insisted the state authorities had the situation under control and told MSNBC that Trump never suggested deploying the Guard during a phone call on Friday, calling the president a 'stone cold liar'. The admonishments did not deter the administration. 'It's a bald-faced lie for Newsom to claim there was no problem in Los Angeles before President Trump got involved,' Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, said. 9.08am Unrest continues across Los Angeles 8.56am Los Angeles protests in pictures Police clash with demonstrators after immigration enforcement detains hundreds of people in Los Angeles RINGO CHIU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES TAYFUN COSKUN/ANADOLU/GETTY IMAGES JUSTIN L STEWART/NEWS ENTERPRISES INC RINGO CHIU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES 8.47am LAPD: National Guard deployed too quickly 8.45am Police and firefighters tackle street fire Protesters chanted as police responded to the fire SAM LOVETT FOR THE TIMES Protesters set a bin on fire and pushed it into the centre of a main road to the north of downtown Los Angeles. Within a matter of minutes a long line of police cars came racing around the corner, escorting two fire trucks to extinguish the blaze. Dozens of police stood watch as the firemen set to work while a group of protesters chanted further down in the street. 'Move aside,' one policewoman told me. Most of the unrest has given way to small, isolated episodes like this. There are still dozens of demonstrators roaming the streets — and the occasional loud bang — but the night appears to be calming down. 8.38am FBI offers reward for officer assault suspect A man accused of assaulting a federal officer at an immigration protest on Saturday has been added to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Most Wanted list, with a $50,000 bounty on his arrest. After three days of public disorder in Los Angeles, the FBI is seeking the public's help in identifying a man who allegedly threw rocks at law enforcement property, injuring a federal officer and damaging government vehicles. A reward has been offered for information leading to his arrest. 8.20am San Francisco 'solidarity' demonstration escalates In San Francisco a demonstration called to show solidarity with the protests in Los Angeles also turned violent on Sunday, resulting in at least 60 arrests. The demonstration in downtown San Francisco started at about 6pm near an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) office but quickly developed into a standoff between demonstrators and police dressed in riot gear. Three police officers were injured, one of whom was hospitalised, according to the San Fransico Police Department. The Democrat mayor, Daniel Lurie, said in a post on X: 'Everyone in this country has a right to make their voice heard peacefully … But we will never tolerate violent and destructive behaviour. 'Violence directed at law enforcement or public servants is never acceptable.' X (Twitter) content blocked Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Enable cookiesAllow cookies once 8.17am Chinatown deserted amid looting fears The streets of Chinatown, a usually bustling neighbourhood, are deserted. But one private security guard, who gave his name as Salazar, has been instructed by his bosses to continue with his late-night patrols. He has been tasked with monitoring several properties in Chinatown and deterring protesters, despite reports of looting. Salazar, 24, is armed with nothing but a taser and is set to work until 7am local time, alongside just one other security guard. 'I'm feeling pretty nervous about the night ahead,' he said. 'I've been told that if people start looting I shouldn't get involved.' When asked what he made of the protests, he said: 'I can't choose sides.' 8.15am Police 'firing at heads' with non-lethal rounds Rounds of non-lethal ammunition are said to have been used by police SAMUEL LOVETT Multiple people have been struck in the face with the non-lethal ammunition being used by police, one protester has claimed. 'They shouldn't be firing that high,' says Joshua, 20, who lives close to Paramount, one of the first neighbourhoods to experience unrest. 'I don't mind about being hit in the legs, but not the face.' He showed a so-called 'sponge bullet' he had recovered from an earlier confrontation. It was a 40mm hard foam projectile that police typically used to disperse crowds without causing serious harm. Police were advised not to fire this ammunition at the head, neck, face, eyes, or spine, unless an officer or another person is under attack. However, Joshua alleged the 'cops are being reckless' when using them. 8.03am Trump administration provoked chaos, says mayor The Los Angeles mayor has blamed the increasingly aggressive protests on Trump's decision to deploy the Guard, calling it a move designed to enflame tensions. Karen Bass urged protesters not to 'engage in violence and chaos', adding on X: 'Don't give the administration what they want.' 'What we're seeing in Los Angeles is chaos that is provoked by the administration,' she said at a press conference on Sunday afternoon. 'This is about another agenda, this isn't about public safety.' X (Twitter) content blocked Please enable cookies and other technologies to view this content. You can update your cookies preferences any time using privacy manager. Enable cookiesAllow cookies once 8.00am Masked protesters defy orders to leave Katarina, left, plans to stay at the protests in Los Angeles 'all night long' It is midnight in Los Angeles and masked protesters are continuing to congregate around the northern edge of the downtown area, despite police orders to leave. Multiple helicopters circle above as demonstrators linger in groups in the street. Police are using flash bangs and tear gas to move the groups away from downtown LA and into Chinatown, which is located to the north. Some of the protestors appear to be responding with fireworks as loud booms echo throughout the neighbourhood. 'I'm here to fight facism, bro,' says one 28-year-old woman called Katrina, as she wraps the top of her head in a Palestinian keffiyeh to further conceal her face. 'I'm staying out all night long.' 7.57am Immigration raids target workplaces Earlier officials from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had carried out raids on workplaces suspected of employing illegal immigrants, rounding up and arresting hundreds of foreign nationals. There have been at least 118 arrests by ICE agents in the last week in Los Angeles. The Department of Homeland Security estimated there were 2.6 million undocumented migrants in California, the largest number of any state. 7.55am Travel ban adds to immigration tensions President Trump's ban on travel to the United States by citizens from 12 mainly African and Middle Eastern countries took effect Monday amid rising tension over the president's escalating campaign of immigration enforcement. The proclamation, which Trump signed last week, applies to citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. It also imposes heightened restrictions on people from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela who are outside the US and do not hold a valid visa. 7.50am Photographer hospitalised by non-lethal bullet The photographer Nick Stern was shot by LAPD officers at the protests MANUEL MIRAMONTES A British photographer required emergency surgery after being hit by a non-lethal bullet fired during the protests in Los Angeles. Nick Stern was documenting a stand-off between anti Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) protesters and police outside a Home Depot in Paramount when a 14mm round known as a 'sponge bullet' hit him in the thigh. He has now undergone an operation and is recovering at Long Beach Memorial Medical Center. 'I had a press ID round my neck, a large camera, a video camera … I was making a point of making myself visible as media,' he told The Times. 'Then I felt this horrific shooting pain impacting my leg. I felt down immediately and felt this large lump … then I blacked out' • Read in full: British photographer, 60, shot by police 7.40am Demonstrators torch cars in riots A flash bomb is deployed on the 101 highway near the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles ERIC THAYER/AP Protesters had torched and vandalised cars on Sunday night as police attempted to keep them away from the National Guard troops. At least three self-driving Waymo cars were burned, with two others damaged as protesters roamed around a limited area in downtown Los Angeles. Traffic was halted on a freeway for over an hour as scores of people thronged the roadway. The LAPD established containment lines some distance from federal buildings, stopping contact between demonstrators and armed National Guardsmen from the 79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team. 7.33am California to challenge Guard deployment The California governor accused President Trump of 'putting fuel on the fire' by deploying the National Guard. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said the state would file a lawsuit over the 'illegal, immoral and unconstitutional' deployment. 'Donald Trump has created the conditions you've seen on your TV tonight,' he told MSNBC. 'He's exacerbated the conditions … ever since he announced he was taking over the National Guard. We're going to test that theory with a lawsuit tomorrow.' 7.30am Trump: LA should use National Guard President Trump said that the LA police chief, Jim McDonnell, should use National Guard 'right now'. 'Jim McDonnell, the highly respected LAPD Chief, just stated that the protesters are getting very much more aggressive, and that he would 'have to reassess the situation,' as it pertains to bringing in the troops,' the president wrote on his Truth Social platform. 'He should, RIGHT NOW!!! Don't let these thugs get away with this. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!' 7.27am Officers 'overwhelmed' by protesters, says police chief Demonstrator burned Waymo self-driving cars JILL CONNELLY/REUTERS The Los Angeles police chief, Jim McDonnell, said officers were 'overwhelmed' by the protesters who stayed on after an initial peaceful demonstration. He said they included regular agitators who show up at demonstrations to cause trouble. Several dozen people were arrested throughout the weekend. At least one suspect was detained Sunday for throwing a Molotov cocktail at police, and another for ramming a motorcycle into a line of officers. 7.25am Riots erupt at detention centre Protestors faced off with members of the National Guard outside the Metropolitan Detention Centre in downtown Los Angeles, throwing chunks of concrete, rocks, electric scooters and fireworks at police from behind a makeshift barrier that spanned the width of a street. Police responded with tear gas and other measures, declaring an unlawful assembly — a precursor to officers moving in and making arrests. 7.15am Trump: You will see law and order The president said troops sent to Los Angeles would ensure 'very strong law and order,' while appearing to leave the door open to deploying soldiers in other cities. 'You have violent people and we are not going to let them get away with it,' President Trump told reporters on Sunday. 'I think you're going to see some very strong law and order.' 7.10am Trump deploys National Guard over protests Police detain a demonstrator near the Los Angeles Detention Center on Sunday BARBARA DAVIDSON/REUTERS Thousands of protesters took to the streets in response to President Trump's extraordinary deployment of the National Guard, blocking off a major freeway and setting self-driving cars on fire as law enforcement used tear gas, rubber bullets and flash bangs to control the crowd in Los Angeles. Trump, who became the first American leader in 60 years to deploy the National Guard on United States soil without a request for aid from a state governor, called up 2,000 soldiers, with about 300 so far deployed to America's second-largest city in a show of executive might. US US news Related articles VIDEO National Guard fires tear gas at immigration protesters June 09 2025, 12.30am George Grylls , Washington Correspondent | Peter Stubley | David Harding VIDEO Troops deployed in LA after Trump demands 'strong law and order' June 09 2025, 12.25am George Grylls , Washington Correspondent PROMOTED CONTENT

CNN reveals how people really feel about Trump's response to LA riots
CNN reveals how people really feel about Trump's response to LA riots

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

CNN reveals how people really feel about Trump's response to LA riots

CNN 's top data analyst revealed how Americans really feel about President Donald Trump 's approach to immigration after the president sent federal troops to Los Angeles in the face of violent riots. 'This is Trump's net approval rating on immigration,' Harry Enten said on air Monday while comparing his -21 approval rating in June 2017 to his current +1 rating on the issue. 'It's gone up like a rocket now versus eight years ago during Trump's first term,' he explained. 'There is no issue on which Trump is doing so much better than he was in his first term more than the issue of immigration. ' The comments came after riots and looting gripped Los Angeles over the weekend, triggered by immigration raids that resulted in dozens of arrests of what authorities said were illegal migrants and gang members. Around 300 National Guard troops were deployed to the city, spurring anger and fear among many residents. Enten said that 'Donald Trump is eager to take on this fight,' citing two CBS surveys showing that LA locals are largely fed up with how their city and state has handled immigration. 'Trump is above 50 percent and his actions are above 50 percent,' the data chief said. 'The American electorate believe that the Democrats don't have a clue on the issue of immigration,' he added, mentioning California Gov. Gavin Newsom and LA Mayor Karen Bass . A poll from CBS News conducted from June 4 to June 6 found that 54 percent of Americans approve of Trump's plans to deport all of those in the country illegally, Enten continued. Another 51 percent said they supported agents searching their respective towns for suspected illegal aliens. Enten also produced three polls that all showed a clear preference for Republicans when it comes to trusting a party to handle immigration. 'No matter what poll you look at, no matter which way you cut it, the American public is with the Republicans, the American public is with Donald Trump,' he said. Trump said the National Guard was necessary because Gov. Newsom and other Democrats have failed to quell recent protests targeting immigration agents. House Speaker Mike Johnson, a staunch Trump ally, endorsed the president's move, doubling down Trump's recent criticisms of California democrats and their cooperation with his orders. Former Vice President Kamala Harris, who lives in Los Angeles, said the immigration arrests and Guard deployment were designed as part of a 'cruel, calculated agenda to spread panic and division.' As of writing, some 60 arrests have been made.

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